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PNS Daily Newscast - February 16, 2018

Florida lawmakers put a concealed weapons bill on hold; also on today's nationwide rundown, concern about Washington State sharing immigrant activist information with ICE agents; and romance scams on the rise.

Headwaters Economics policy director Chris Mehl, who prepared the results, says the region has seen slow and steady growth and has potential for much more across all sectors if natural assets - such as public lands - are leveraged.

"So, everything from health care and technology and services to also agriculture - to things like hunting and fishing and the outdoor-recreation economy."

Mehl says public lands on the Front are connected to more than 10,000 tourism and recreation jobs - jobs that mostly stayed intact even through the recession.

"Kind of a remarkable event, that while other things were dropping and falling, out-of-staters were still coming to hunt on the Rocky Mountain Front, whether for birds or for elk. And in total, about $10 million a year is pumped into the economy along the Front."

The Rocky Mountain Front Heritage Act has seen controversy, with opposition coming from some environmental and recreation interests. Mehl says he sees a lot of common ground in the legislation.

"It keeps the good things in, but I think it's also going to also make it available for the next generation. These lands are an attractant. People like them if they already live here for quality of life, or they like to visit them if they're coming to see us from Minnesota or New Mexico or somewhere else."

The Coalition to Protect the Rocky Mountain Front paid for the report. The group supports the Rocky Mountain Front Heritage Act, which was introduced a year ago by Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont.